New York Post

Bracket building

- By ZACH BRAZILLER

The day has finally arrived. It’s Christmas for college basketball fans. Selection Sunday is at long last here after COVID-19 knocked out the tournament a year ago.

By 7 p.m., we will have a bracket, 68 teams all sharing the same dream and all headed to Indianapol­is for a truly unique NCAA Tournament. The Post prepares you for the long-awaited festivitie­s below:

No. 1s

There shouldn’t be any surprises here. Undefeated Gonzaga will be the overall No. 1 seed. Baylor, Michigan and Illinois will be the other three. There really isn’t an argument or debate. These are the top four ranked teams in the NET, the evaluation tool the selection committee relies on. The Illini, who have emerged in recent weeks as the last No. 1, do have six losses. But they also have 11 Quad 1 wins, the most in the country. Nobody else has more than eight. Michigan star Isaiah Livers’ foot injury won’t be used against the Wolverines, because the committee won’t have a body of work by which to evaluate Michigan without him.

BUBBLE

It’s Selection Sunday, so of course Syracuse is one of the big stories. The Orange have lived on the bubble in recent years. This team played its way into this spot, going 6-3 down the stretch, defeating tournament teams Clemson and North Carolina in that time, while losing at the buzzer to Virginia in the ACC Tournament. Syracuse’s 40 NET rating and 6-1 record in Quad 2 games should be enough, even if the one Quad 1 win is light. It will be interestin­g to see what the committee does with Missouri Valley Conference runner-up Drake. Two Quad 3 losses and a 1-2 record in Quad 1 games is underwhelm­ing. But the Bulldogs do have nine road wins — only Illinois has that many — a NET of 43, and there is a chance star forward ShanQuan Hemphill could return from a fractured foot in time for the NCAA Tournament. He was out for three of Drake’s four losses. Utah State entered the day with the biggest opportunit­y for a bubble team, facing tournament lock San Diego State in the Mountain West Conference title game. But a 68-57 loss leaves the Aggies 2-5 in Quad 1 games and potentiall­y on the outside looking in despite a NET of 37. Bubble teams will have a close eye on the AAC title game, hoping Cincinnati doesn’t join Georgetown (Big East) and Oregon State (Pac-12) as a bid-stealer.

LOCALS

This is usually the time of the year Rutgers fans are thinking of a coaching search or wondering why their recruiting class is so meager. Not this year. Not now. Rutgers, in the tournament for the first time since 1991, will be the only power-conference team from the area in the NCAA Tournament. The Scarlet Knights will be joined by MAAC Tournament champion Iona and Rick Pitino, a remarkable story in its own right.

The lower the seed, the better for Rutgers. Given the Scarlet Knights’ résumé — ranked 39 in the NET and 5-9 in Quad 1 games — they are in that spot teams would like to avoid, as a potential eighth or ninth seed. A 10th or 11th seed would be preferred.

Either way, coach Steve Pikiell’s team is going dancing and should have a winnable opening-round game. That’s reason enough to celebrate.

This is, meanwhile, becoming a March tradition for Iona, which is advancing to its fifth straight tournament, although its first with Pitino as its coach.

The Gaels’ season was destroyed by COVID-19 pauses. They had a 51-day layoff and were the ninth seed in their conference tournament, since the MAAC seeded based on the number of conference wins, not wining percentage. Pitino’s team responded by winning four games in five days. Iona is unlikely to have to play in the First Four, since it has a NET of 139. A 15 seed is probable.

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